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AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02)

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AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) Course Overview

The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) certification is an entry-level certification that is ideal for individuals who want to demonstrate their knowledge of the AWS Cloud. This certification validates a candidate’s basic understanding of the AWS Cloud, its services, and how to use them. A Cloud Practitioner must understand the core AWS services, their use cases, and the advantages of using them.


The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner (CLF-C02) exam covers five core domains:

  1. Security and Compliance
  2. Technology
  3. Billing and Pricing
  4. Strategy and Business Value
  5. Resource Optimization


The exam is designed to assess the candidate’s knowledge and understanding of the AWS Cloud and its services. To prepare for the exam, candidates should have a good understanding of cloud concepts, AWS services, security, automation, and other related topics. They should also have experience in using the AWS Management Console and other AWS tools.The AWS Certified Cloud Practitioner certification is a great way for IT professionals to demonstrate their knowledge of the AWS Cloud and its services, and to show employers that they are knowledgeable and capable when it comes to cloud computing.

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What You Will Get?

Study Material

Mock Exams

24+ Hours of Live Training

Exam Registration Assistance

Case Studies Soft Copy

Official Courseware from Amazon

Learning Outcome

After the completion of the course, the participants would be able to:

How to align multiple AWS services with an organization's goal of delivering optimal service.
How to build services on AWS.
AWS roles and responsibilities.
AWS Best practices.
Tools and techniques in AWS.
Real-Time Case Studies.

Course Curriculum

Domain 1: Cloud Concepts+

1.1 Define the AWS Cloud and its value proposition


Define the benefits of the AWS cloud including:


  1. Security
  2. Reliability
  3. High Availability
  4. Elasticity
  5. Agility
  6. Pay-as-you go pricing
  7. Scalability
  8. Global Reach
  9. Economy of scale


Explain how the AWS cloud allows users to focus on business value

  1. Shifting technical resources to revenue-generating activities as opposed to managing infrastructure


1.2 Identify aspects of AWS Cloud economics


Define items that would be part of a Total Cost of Ownership proposal


  1. Understand the role of operational expenses (OpEx)
  2. Understand the role of capital expenses (CapEx)
  3. Understand labor costs associated with on-premises operations
  4. Understand the impact of software licensing costs when moving to the cloud


Identify which operations will reduce costs by moving to the cloud


  1. Right-sized infrastructure
  2. Benefits of automation
  3. Reduce compliance scope (for example, reporting)
  4. Managed services (for example, RDS, ECS, EKS, DynamoDB)


1.3 Explain the different cloud architecture design principles


Explain the design principles


  1. Design for failure
  2. Decouple components versus monolithic architecture
  3. Implement elasticity in the cloud versus on-premises
  4. Think parallel

Domain 2: Security and Compliance+

2.1 Define the AWS shared responsibility model


  1. Recognize the elements of the Shared Responsibility Model
  2. Describe the customer’s responsibility on
  3. Describe how the customer’s responsibilities may shift depending on the service used (for example with RDS, Lambda, or EC2)
  4. Describe AWS responsibilities


2.2 Define AWS Cloud security and compliance concepts


  1. Identify where to find AWS compliance information
  2. Locations of lists of recognized available compliance controls (for example, HIPPA, SOCs)
  3. Recognize that compliance requirements vary among AWS services

  4. At a high level, describe how customers achieve compliance on AWS
  5. Identify different encryption options on AWS (for example, In transit, At rest)
  6. Describe who enables encryption on AWS for a given service
  7. Recognize there are services that will aid in auditing and reporting
  8. Recognize that logs exist for auditing and monitoring (do not have to understand the logs)
  9. Define Amazon CloudWatch, AWS Config, and AWS CloudTrail
  10. Explain the concept of least privileged access


2.3 Identify AWS access management capabilities


  1. Access keys and password policies (rotation, complexity)
  2. Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA)
  3. AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM)
  4. Groups/users
  5. Roles
  6. Policies managed policies compared to custom policies
  7. Tasks that require the use of root accounts Protection of root accounts


2.4 Identify resources for security support


  1. Recognize there are different network security capabilities
  2. Native AWS services (for example, security groups, Network ACLs, AWS WAF)
  3. 3 rd party security products from the AWS Marketplace
  4. Recognize there is documentation and where to find it (for example, best practices, whitepapers, official documents)
  5. AWS Knowledge Center, Security Center, a security forum, and security blogs
  6. Partner Systems Integrators
  7. Know that security checks are a component of AWS Trusted Advisor

Domain 3: Technology+

3.1 Define methods of deploying and operating in the AWS Cloud


  1. Identify at a high-level different ways of provisioning and operating in the AWS cloud
  2. Programmatic access, APIs, SDKs, AWS Management Console, CLI, Infrastructure as Code
  3. Identify different types of cloud deployment models
  4. All in with cloud/cloud native
  5. Hybrid
  6. On-premises
  7. Identify connectivity options
  8. VPN
  9. AWS Direct Connect
  10. Public internet


3.2 Define the AWS global infrastructure


  1. Describe the relationships among Regions, Availability Zones, and Edge Locations
  2. Describe how to achieve high availability through the use of multiple Availability Zones
  3. Recall that high availability is achieved by using multiple Availability Zones
  4. Recognize that Availability Zones do not share single points of failure
  5. Describe when to consider the use of multiple AWS Regions
  6. Disaster recovery/business continuity
  7. Low latency for end-users
  8. Data sovereignty
  9. Describe at a high level the benefits of Edge Locations
  10. Amazon CloudFront
  11. AWS Global Accelerator


3.3 Identify the core AWS services


  1. Describe the categories of services on AWS (compute, storage, network, database)
  2. Identify AWS compute services
  3. Recognize there are different compute families
  4. Recognize the different services that provide computing (for example, AWS Lambda compared to Amazon Elastic Container Service (Amazon ECS), Amazon EC2, etc.)
  5. Recognize that elasticity is achieved through Auto Scaling
  6. Identify the purpose of load balancers
  7. Identify different AWS storage services
  8. Describe Amazon S3
  9. Describe Amazon Elastic Block Store (Amazon EBS)
  10. Describe Amazon S3 Glacier
  11. Describe AWS Snowball
  12. Describe Amazon Elastic File System (Amazon EFS)
  13. Describe AWS Storage Gateway
  14. Identify AWS networking services
  15. Identify VPC
  16. Identify security groups
  17. Identify the purpose of Amazon Route 53
  18. Identify VPN, AWS Direct Connect
  19. Identify different AWS database services
  20. Install databases on Amazon EC2 compared to AWS-managed databases
  21. Identify Amazon RDS
  22. Identify Amazon DynamoDB
  23. Identify Amazon Redshift


3.4 Identify resources for technology support


  1. Recognize there is documentation (best practices, whitepapers, AWS Knowledge Center, forums, blogs)
  2. AWS Abuse
  3. AWS support cases
  4. Premium support
  5. Technical Account Managers
  6. Identify the various levels and scope of AWS support
  7. Recognize there is a partner network (marketplace, third-party) including Independent Software Vendors and System Integrators
  8. Identify sources of AWS technical assistance and knowledge including professional services, solution architects, training and certification, and the Amazon Partner Network
  9. Identify the benefits of using AWS Trusted Advisor

Domain 4: Billing and Pricing+

4.1 Compare and contrast the various pricing models for AWS (for example, On-Demand Instances, Reserved Instances, and Spot Instance pricing)


  1. Identify scenarios/best fit for On-Demand Instance pricing
  2. Identify scenarios/best fit for Reserved-Instance pricing
  3. Describe Reserved-Instances flexibility
  4. Describe Reserved-Instances behavior in AWS Organizations
  5. Identify scenarios/best fit for Spot Instance pricing


4.2 Recognize the various account structures in relation to AWS billing and pricing


  1. Recognize that consolidated billing is a feature of AWS Organizations
  2. Identify how multiple accounts aid in allocating costs across departments


4.3 Identify resources available for billing support


  1. Identify ways to get billing support and information
  2. Cost Explorer, AWS Cost and Usage Report, Amazon QuickSight, third-party partners, and AWS Marketplace tools
  3. Open a billing support case
  4. The role of the Concierge for AWS Enterprise Support Plan customers
  5. Identify where to find pricing information on AWS services
  6. AWS Simple Monthly Calculator
  7. AWS Services product pages
  8. AWS Pricing API
  9. Recognize that alarms/alerts exist
  10. Identify how tags are used in cost allocation